Posted on 08/15/2011 4:53:20 AM PDT by Colofornian
During the early 1830s, Emma Smith was beginning to have some strong suspicions that her husband, Joseph (Mormon prophet) might be involved in infidelity. While these were only suspicions, Oliver Cowdery (one of the three witnesses to the Book of Mormon) had proof of Smiths adultery and confronted him on it. Smith denied to Cowdery that he was in any such activity. Cowdery would be excommunicated from the Mormon church on several counts including, by falsely insinuating that he [Smith] was guilty of adultery. 1
Emmas suspicions were confirmed when she caught Joseph and 19-year-old Eliza Partridge locked in a room upstairs together. Emma had hired Eliza to take care of their newborn. 2 Joseph admitted to his personal secretary, William Clayton, that if he took Eliza and Emily Partridge (twin sisters) as wives, he knew that Emma would pitch on him and obtain a divorce and leave him.3 But, Joseph added that he would not relinquish anything.4 And he didnt. He would eventually marry the sisters in March, 1843 (without Emmas knowledge).
In the meantime, Smith shared to his friend John Bennett his dilemma and the trouble he was having with Emma. He wondered what he should do, and Bennett replied, This is very simple. Get a revelation that polygamy is right, and all your troubles will be at an end.5
The Revelation
Joseph didnt waste any time. In 1843 he sat down and wrote a command from the Lord that Emma would be destroyed if she didnt receive all those that have been given unto my servant Joseph. If she didnt obey this command, not only would the Lord destroy her, but the Lord will bless Joseph and multiply him with wives and children and crowns of eternal lives in the eternal worlds (see the Mormon scripture Doctrine & Covenants 132:52, 54, 56, 61-62).
In this same command, Emma was told to forgive Josephs trespasses if she wanted to be forgiven (D&C 132:56). She was then told that the Lord would justify Joseph: If he have ten virgins given unto him by this law [the law of priesthood], he cannot commit adultery, for they belong to him, and they are given unto him; therefore is he justified (D&C 132:61-62).
Interestingly, Martin Harris affirmed Joseph had practiced polygamy as early as 1838five years before Joseph received his revelation.6 But after receiving the supposed revelation in 1843, Joseph no longer had to keep his affairs from his wife or the public. And, he made this plural-wife doctrine available to all Mormon men under the condition that they get permission from their first wife. Doctrine and Covenants says that the first wife must give consent before her husband can take another wife. The second wife also had to be a virgin and not married to any other man. If the first wife consented then the man would not be committing adultery (D&C 132:61).
It isnt know if Joseph sought permission from Emma for each of his many wives, but it is known that Joseph didnt just marry virgins. He married other mens wives. 7 We have documentation of at least some of the women Joseph married (there may have been more 8): Eighteen of Josephs wives were single when he married them and had never been married previously. Another four were widows. But the remaining 11 women were already married to other men, cohabiting with their legal husbands when Smith married them.9
In addition, 11 of Smiths wives were 14 to 20 years old when they married him. Nine wives were 21 to 30 years old. Eight of his wives were between the ages of 31 to 40. Two wives were between 41-50, and three wives were between 51 to 60 years of age. 10 After Smiths death, many more women married him by proxy, sealed to him for eternity. And for the record, Smith had at least on acknowledged polygamous child named Josephine. The childs mother was Sylvia Sessions Lyon.11
The Extent
Many Mormons today have no idea how widespread polygamy was. For instance, Mormon singer Donny Osmond believes that only a relatively small number of church members did so [practiced polygamy] prior to the late 1800s when the Church decreed the practice unacceptable.12 However, polygamy was an accepted practice, and it wasnt restricted to a mere few. Lets take a look at what a few of the church prophets and leaders said.
First Prophet and President Joseph Smith said in 1843: ....God...gave me this revelation and commandment on celestial and plural marriage and the same God commanded me to obey it. He said to me that unless I accepted it and introduced it, and practiced it, I, together with my people, would be damned and cut off from this time hence forth....But we have got to observe it. It is an eternal principle and was given by way of commandment and not by way of instruction.10
Second Prophet and President Brigham Young said in 1865: ...the whole question, therefore, narrows itself to this in the Mormon mind. Polygamy was revealed by God, or the entire fabric of their faith is false. To ask them to give up such an item of belief is to ask them to relinquish the whole, to acknowledge their Priesthood a lie, their ordinances a deception, and all they have toiled for, lived for, bled for, prayed for, or hoped for, a miserable failure and a waste of life.11
Third Prophet and President John Taylor said in 1880: The United States says we cannot marry more than one wife. God says different...when adulterers and libertines pass a law forbidding polygamy, the Saints cannot obey it....11
On September 27, 1886 Taylor gave this revelation: Thus saith the Lord...I have not revoked this law [plural wives doctrine] nor will I for it is everlasting & (sic) those who will enter into my glory must obey the conditions thereof, even so Amen.13
These statements raise some important questions. Did God really use these men, especially Joseph Smith? Gods Word says that holy men of God spoke as they were moved by the Holy Ghost (2 Peter 1:21, emphasis added). Only holy men (although not sinless) would be used of God to write His Word. Because of this fact alone, Mormons must question whether Doctrine & Covenants is truly the revelations of Jesus Christ.
According to the Bible (especially since the New Testament was written) men are to have only one living wife (1 Corinthians 7:2; Titus 1:6). Because the Bible contradicts Doctrine & Covenants Mormons must question the validity of one or the other. They cant both be right.
If our Mormon friend still believes the Lord gave Joseph Smith and other Mormon prophets a revelation on plural marriage, we can ask this: Why would the prophets (such as Taylor in 1886) say the plural wives doctrine was everlasting, and then some short years later (1890), deny having anything to do with such a doctrine? In 1869, fourth prophet and president Wilford Woodruff said, If we were to do away with polygamy...we must do away with prophets and Apostles, with revelation and the gifts and graces of the Gospel, and finally give up our religion altogether.14
He changed his tune when he wrote an Official Declaration, also referred to as The Manifesto (found at the end of octrine and Covenants). Woodruff wrote:
Press dispatches having been sent for political purposes...allege that plural marriages are still being solemnized...that...the leaders of the Church have taught, encouraged and urged the continuance of the practice of polygamyI, therefore, as President of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, do hereby, in the most solemn manner declared that these charges are false. We are not teaching polygamy or plural marriage, nor permitting any person to enter into its practice....I now publicly declare that my advice to the Latter-day Saints is to refrain from contracting any marriage forbidden by the law of the land.15
President Lorenzo Snow affirmed Wilford Woodruffs statements and that he was the only man on the earth at the present time who holds the keys of the sealing ordinacnes, we consider him fully authorized by virtue of his position to issue the Manifest...which is dated September 24, 1890.16
Yet, the U.S. Senates Committee on Privileges and Elections submitted a report in which it stated, A sufficient number of specific instances of the taking of plural wives since the manifesto of 1890, so called, have been shown by the testimony as having taken among officials of the Mormon church to demonstrate the fact that the leaders in this church, the first presidency and the twelve apostles, connive at the practice of taking plural wives and have done so ever since the manifesto was issued.17
The Response
A Mormon woman, well call Marjorie, discovered that the Mormon church first defended polygamy, then said they would stop it. Yet while the church leaders condemned followers who were still in polygamous relationships, some remained polygamous in secret.18 Marjorie may not have known that the Mormon leadership even considered the idea of secret concubines, wherein men and women could live together in secret. 19 After discovering this apparent hypocrisy, Marjorie became concerned about other revelations that Joseph proclaimed in Doctrine and Covenants.
But not all Mormons will respond as Marjorie did. There are some who still defend this past church doctrine. Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought tells us one of the reasons Mormons defend the plural-wives doctrine:
Many Latter-day Saintsespecially those that have polygamous ancestorstake pride in the faithful men and women who practiced plural marriage long ago. Even though LDS men take just one legal wife today, many devout Mormons still believe in the principle and may be sealed to more than one woman for eternity. The Mormon churchs present doctrine of celestial marriagewhich includes the promise of plural marriage in the afterlife, and the current pracitce of plural marriage among Fundamentalist Mormons, are the legacies of Joseph Smiths revelation sanctioning Nauvoo polygamy as new and everlasting covenant.20
Other Mormons defend Smiths revelation for another reason. For instance, a while ago I asked Pat, a Mormon friend, Why is it that the Mormon church accepts Josephs polygamy and that of other church leaders, but condemns it for everyone else?
After thinking about the question for a moment, Pat replied, Well, it was a command from God during a very special time only. It was the same command that God gave the prophets in the Old Testament. Also, Joseph was concerned about the widows and the older single women who didnt have a man to protect them. These were the type of women he married. He really had a good heart for doing this.
Surprised at the answer, I said, But God was against plural marriage in the Old Testament. Only because of the hardness of mans heart He did allow it [see Genesis 16:4-7]. There were also consequences because of polygamy,
such as jealousy.
I later shared with Pat (after doing some homework) what the Bible had to say (see the verses in the box).
After sharing with Pat the Leviticus verses, I told her, You cant defend Joseph Smiths polygamy. He and other Mormon men went completely against the laws of Leviticus. Joseph Smith, for instance, married five pairs of sisters;21 he married a mother and her daughter;22 and he took other mens wives (which included Joseph demanding the wives of all 12 Mormon apostles).23
I then gently added, I know you want to think the best of Joseph Smith. I wish I could, too. But if the Mormon church is about truth, as you say it is, we must look at the truth regarding Smiths life. He didnt just marry widows and older single women, as youve been told. He married pubescent girls, others in their late teens; women in their twenties and thirties, and only a few in their fifties and sixties. Most of these women had never been married or were already married. Few were widows.
Pat was at a loss for words and simply said, Interesting.
Leviticus 18:18,20; 20:14 tells us that God forbids a man, which included the prophets of the Old Testament, to marry a woman in addition to her sister...while she is alive (18:18). Neither was he to marry a woman and her mother (20:14). Neither was he to have intercourse with your neighbors wife, to be defiled with her (18:20).
So, the question must be answered, was polygamy started by the FLDS Church or the LDS church? The answer is, clearly the Mormon (LDS) church. Talk to any FLDS person and they will proudly tell you they are the true Mormon, for they obey the Mormon scriptures, which includes all that is written in Doctrine and Covenants.
Notes:
1. Joseph Smith, History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 7 vols. (Salt Lake City, UT: Deseret Book Co., 1978), 3:16, April 11, 1838.
2. Richard S. Van Wagoner, Mormon Polygamy: A History (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1992), 79.
3. William Clayton diary, August 16, 1843, in George D. Smith, ed., An Intimate Chronicle: The Journals of William Clayton (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books in association with Smith Research Associates, 1995), 117.
4. Ibid.
5. Dr. W. Wyle, Joseph Smith the Prophet: His Family and His Friends (Salt Lake City, UT: Triune Publishing Co., 1886), 62.
6. Dan Vogel, ed., Early Mormon Documents, (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 1998), 2:348.
7. W. Wyle, 70.
8. For a list of 36 wives with marriage dates, refer to Fawn Brodie, No Man Knows My History, 335-36. For a list of 84 women who were either married to Joseph Smith and/or sealed to him as his wife for eternity, refer to Jerald and Sandra Tanner, Joseph Smith and Polygamy (Salt Lake City, UT: Utah Lighthouse Ministry), 41-47.
9. Tod Compton, In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books, 2001), 15.
10. Ibid., 11.
11. The child was born on February 8, 1844. The mother was legally married to Windsor P. Lyoncited in D. Michael Quinns The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books in association with Smith Research Associates, 1994), 642, Appendix 7. One contemporary Mormon woman of Joseph Smiths said, You hear often that Joseph Smith had no polygamous offspring. The reason of this is very simple. Abortion was practiced on a large scale in Nauvoo. Dr. John C. Bennett, the evil genius of Joseph, brought this abomination into a scientific system. He showed to my husband and me the instruments with which he used to operate for Joseph. There was a house in Nauvoo, right across the flat...a kind of hospital. They sent the women there, when they showed signs of celestial consequences. Abortion was practiced regularly in this house (emphasis in original). W. Wyle, 59.
12. Donny Osmond, Life Is Just What You Make It (New York, Hyperion, 1999), 13.
13. Contributor, 5:259; quoted in Ogden Krauts The Church and the Gospel (Salt Lake City, UT: Pioneer Press, 1993), 186.
14. Millennial Star, Voume 27:673; quoted in Kraut, 186-187.
40. Salt Lake City Tribune, January 6, 1880; quoted in Kraut, 187.
15. Revelation given by John Taylor, dated September 27, 1886; photocopy of the original appears in 1886 RevelationA Revelation of the Lord to John Taylor. Published by the Fundamentalists, quoted in Tanner and Tanner, Mormonism: Shadow or Reality? 242. 15. Journal of Discourses, 13:166.
16. Doctrine and Covenants, 13:166.
17. Ibid.
18. Reed Smoot Case, 4:476-82, quoted in Tanner and Tanner, Mormonism: Shadow or Reality? 256-257.
19. For example, in 1896 Mormon apostle Abraham H. Cannon took a plural wife by the name of Lillian Hamlin. President Joseph F. Smithy performed the ceremony and obtained the acquiescence of President Woodruff [who wrote the manifesto], on the plea that it wasnt an ordinary case of polygamy but merely a fulfillment of the biblical instruction that a man should take his dead brothers wife... Daily Journal of Abraham H. Cannon, April 5, 1894, Volume 18, 70; quoted in Tanner and Tanner, Mormonism: Shadow or Reality? 244-A.
20. According to the Tanners, the apostle Abraham H. Cannons journal not only reveals that the Mormon leaders approved of polygamy after the manifesto [Official Declaration], but it shows they were considering the idea of a secret system of concubinage: George Qu. Cannon said, I believe in concubinage, or some plan whereby men and women can live together under sacred ordinances and vows until they can be married...such a condition would have to be kept secret.... President Snow said, I have no doubt but concubinage will yet be practiced in this church...when the nations are troubled good women will come here for safety and blessing, and men will accept them as concubines. President Woodruff (author of the manifesto) said, If men enter into some practice of this character to raise a righteous posterity, they will be justified in it... Daily Journal of Abraham H. Cannon, April 5, 1894, Volume 18, 70; quoted in Tanner and Tanner, Mormonism Shadow or Reality? 244-B.
21. Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought (Salt Lake City, UT: Dialogue Foundation, 1994), Volume 27, No. 1, Spring 1994, 36.
22. The sisters that Joseph married were Prescindia (m. 1838) and Zina Huntington (m. Oct. 27, 1841), Delcena (m. before June 1842) and Almera Johnson (m. April 1843), Eliza and Emily Partridge (m. March 1843). Cited in Fawn Brodies, No Man Knows My History (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, Inc., 1945, 1971), 335-36.
23. Joseph Smith married Patty Sessions (age 47 and wife of David Sessions) on March 9, 1842. Smith married Pattys daughter Sylvia (age 25-26?, around 1843-44). Brodie, 335-36.
24. W. Wyle, 71.
Backpedaling faster and faster I see. You said -
The goverment does not have the right to tell people of faith how to practis their religion. Just because all of you dont agree with the LDS doctrine it does not give the government the power to tell them , you or I how to worship.
I cited an example of a person jailed for practicing his religion. Since you say he should practice his religion however he believes - and he believes his religion permits child rape - you must then be endorsing the action.
You all have missed the point of my post and that was the government should not be in the business of regulating religion.
11. The child was born on February 8, 1844. The mother was legally married to Windsor P. Lyoncited in D. Michael Quinns The Mormon Hierarchy: Origins of Power (Salt Lake City, UT: Signature Books in association with Smith Research Associates, 1994), 642, Appendix 7. One contemporary Mormon woman of Joseph Smiths said, You hear often that Joseph Smith had no polygamous offspring. The reason of this is very simple. Abortion was practiced on a large scale in Nauvoo. Dr. John C. Bennett, the evil genius of Joseph, brought this abomination into a scientific system. He showed to my husband and me the instruments with which he used to operate for Joseph. There was a house in Nauvoo, right across the flat...a kind of hospital. They sent the women there, when they showed signs of celestial consequences. Abortion was practiced regularly in this house (emphasis in original). W. Wyle, 59.
No wonder Harry Reid and Mitt Romney are either blase' about abortion or in favor of it. I wonder why this fact is not more widely known?
Kill the messenger, you kill the message.
If I understand you correctly, you are saying, basically, that the Government cannot restrict how you worship and what you believe. The Constitution states in the first amendment: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof.". The interpretation of that, of course, has been a boondoggle for lawyers ever since. There was a Supreme Court decision in Sherbert v. Verner, 374 U.S. 398 (1963), where they required that states have a "compelling interest" in refusing to accommodate religiously motivated conduct.
So, I would surmise from this that the government can only interfere with the free exercise of religion when there is a compelling cause. When the LDS religion first started, there were already laws against polygamy. Smith chose to disobey those laws AS a U.S. citizen, so he was in violation of the law. It would have been different if Smith's religion existed before there was a U.S. Constitution, but that was not how it happened. If it were, then perhaps there would be something about such things in the Constitution that would allow exceptions in certian cases. But it didn't in the LDS case.
For example, the same would apply to Santeria. It is a combined Caribbean/West African religion with some Roman Catholicism mixed in, that, among other things, sacrifices live chickens in their worship. The first Santeria church established in the U.S. was in 1974 (per wikipedia.org). There have been controversies with it and American law. One in particular addressed their treatment of animals. In 1993, the issue of animal sacrifice was taken to the United States Supreme Court in the case of Church of Lukumi Babalu Aye v. City of Hialeah. The Supreme Court ruled that animal cruelty laws targeted specifically at Yoruba were unconstitutional; the Yoruba practice of animal sacrifice has seen no significant legal challenges since then. But when a woman died because her mother thought she was demon possessed and had put a plastic bag over her head to smother her in an exorcism ritual, then the mother was prosecuted for murder. The mother was found not guilty due to insanity, and is currently confined in a New York State psychiatric hospital for the criminally insane.
So, I think the Constitution prevents the government from restricting the free exercise of religion, but when any religion violates federal or state laws, it must adhere to the law unless the courts find a compelling interest in favor of the religion. I don't see any sign of the government threatening established religions in this country and, if they did, as we see in Muslim or communist countries, I believe we have the Constitution on our side and we would not permit such without an unrelenting fight.
place marker
Some white men came & said "you must..." (imposing)
Other white men came & said "you can..." (exposing)
Other white men came & didn't care (live & let live libertarians)
Other white men came & _________ (fill in the blank)
For you to lump all white men together is stereotyping
For you to accuse all white men together as imposing their religion -- when there's no way to break down the #s as to how many/what % of white men did what...is to be guilty of superimposing.
Better quit while you're behind.
Indeed, one could and has been argued in various places here in FR. That is not the issue.
You all have missed the point of my post and that was the government should not be in the business of regulating religion.
Then quit squirming away from my point. If that is your belief then you have no grounds to condemn Jeffs' rape of a 12 year old girl in the name of his religion now do you. Anything goes then.
One day and it won’t be long and the government will be telling everyone who they can and can not worship and you will still be talking about Jeffs.
Aren't the Native Americans allowed to continue their rituals and religious beliefs? They are self-governed on the various reservations and they are even allowed to open gambling casinos on Indian land, open to the public, and this goes on even in states that do not allow legal gambling. I am not aware of restrictions on their religious freedoms in America - on their own reservations or elsewhere. Can you name any?
This is where your historical ignorance & revisionism is showing. (Like I said, you better quit while you're still behind)
First of all, it wasn't all "kumbayah" amongst the Native American tribes. Before white men were in the U.S.; as White men began to populate the U.S.; and after they began to populate the U.S. in great numbers, the fact is that various Native American tribes persistently fought each other.
The Cheyenne were easily provoked in opposing other tribes.
The Comanches were less operative as one solid grouping or tribe--they operated more as "bands"; they drove out the Jumano Indians & the Pueblo Indians & some Apache Indians from the Southern Plains. The Catawba fought the Savannah; and the Catawba were known for fighting other tribes on behalf of the British.
The Fox Indians of Wisconsin rose up vs. the French (1712-1735); the Potawatomi tribe then fought vs. the Fox on behalf of the French.
The very word "Apache" = fighting men & they battled other tribes as well as the Spaniards well before white men: "They were always known as 'wild' Indians, and indeed their early warfare with all neighboring tribes as well as their recent persistent hostility toward our Government, which precipitated a 'war of extermination,' bear out the appropriateness of the designation." The first intruders were the Spanish, who penetrated Apache territory in the late 1500s...When New Mexico became a Spanish colony in 1598, hostilities increased between Spaniards and Apaches.
Source: APACHE TRIBAL NATION
If you're tracing "color wars" here, guitarplayer, that would mean that brown Apaches were fighting lighter brown Spanish in those years.
These border & south-of-the-border tribal clashes also took place in South America, as they did frequently in Africa, island communities and just about all regions.
I could go on and on listing such conflicts. Frankly it was because of both isolation and tribal diversity that Native Americans could not or would not often band together to oppose their enemies.
Btw, there were five tribes known as the "civilized" tribes & were peaceful toward other tribes & white men as well: Cherokee, Chickasaw; Chocktaw; Creek, and Seminole. So I would not count these tribes as being in the "same camp" as the others...they indeed were more solely victimized by white men alone.
One other thing: This same tribal-hostile reality occurs with slavery. It was often other West African tribes who would kidnap other tribesmen to sell them to the Portuguese or British, etc. into slavery for centuries. And for some centuries, the Muslims were far worse than "white men" in the operative slave trade. IOW, there was plenty of historical guilt to pile on ALL.
But go ahead, guitarplayer. I guess I interrupted your brow-beating racist tirade vs. ONLY (& all) white people. As far as I can tell from history, all colors of people groups have committed all sorts of trans-tribal atrocities. All people of each diverse group were not guilty of such acts; but all colors found contributors to mayhem in their midst.
It's the typical liberal approach to want to blame only "white privilege" and "white colonial imperialism"...By all means, blame away...what was done is hardly worth defending...But what I am saying is that the finger-pointing tends to be rather selective...which means they deliberately ignore and/or distort other histories so that only whites tend to be wearing the guilt badge.
Sounds to me guitarplayer that you specialized in music during your campus years much to the downfall of your history homework.
That will be then, this is now and from everything you've posted you NOW it appear you endorse rape of 12 year old children as long as it is part of one's religion. The gov't shouldn't be involved in such rapes because it is part of religion. You'd probably condone aztec human sacrifice as well by the same logic
Guitarplayer, I understand the point you are trying to make about Government intrusion into religious freedoms in our country. Just as the subject of this thread stressed, there are, and must be, some restrictions - just as was true with the Warren Jeffs case as well as the polygamy of the LDS in general. I don't think you or any of us would not agree that proscriptions against certain behaviors ARE the responsibilities of the State. Human sacrifice would be a prime example, but seeing as our current government seems to have no problem sanctioning the equivalent in legal abortion, such acts under the guise of religious freedom should be illegal.
There are still some countries that permit multiple wives and also slavery, but they would not be and should not be permitted to continue such things when they take up residence in the U.S. I also don't think those actions are considered "religious" duties like was done with the early Mormons and with the FLDS now.
As to your fears of our federal government infringing upon our religious traditions, I agree that there are certain elements right now that would delight in being able to do so. We are seeing what is going on in the UK with anti-homosexuality beliefs. I believe that during the Tribulation, the Anti-christ will demand obeisance to him as god and will persecute those who refuse. But for right now, we continue to enjoy freedoms greater than any other nation in the world. Should that time come where Christianity is forbidden to be practiced, I will not be alone in fighting against such tyranny with every ounce of strength and drop of blood I have.
I never thought you did. I hope your wife has found healing and peace about her ordeal.
I also believe that about the end-times people will be persecuted and killed for not worshiping the Anti-christ and Scripture does say no one will be able to buy or sell without his "mark", however, I do not agree that once a person is born again/saved that they can lose their salvation. The Bible says that those who take the mark of the Beast will not be saved, but first of all, the Christians that are alive before the Anti-christ takes power will have already been taken up to heaven and will be out of the world during the seven year tribulation. The unbelievers who were left must make a choice between Christ and the Anti-christ and those that choose Jesus will be the ones who are persecuted and killed for their faith. Those who reject Christ will take the mark and will seal their eternity in hell. The Christians who come to faith during the tribulation will NOT take the mark because they will know not to be deceived.
I think we are in agreement about the endtimes, but thank you for clarifying your statement about the Mormon's having freedom to break the current laws of our country. There is a big difference between government enforcing its laws and those laws being in violation of the Constitutional free exercise of religion clause.
Convicted con man in N.Y.? Paragon Defender used to post some interesting sites so that folks could investigate both sides & decide for themselves. I thought your assertion was interesting so I checked out one of the sites. You may find it interesting yourself as it would seem your assertion that JS was convicted for working a “magic stone” is anything but concrete fact.
I’m not taking sides here, but as we’ve seen on this very thread, folks aren’t afraid to mislead on issues, as Mount Athos aptly pointed out. Hope you’re not part of that crowd.
http://en.fairmormon.org/Joseph_Smith/Legal_issues/Trials/1826_glasslooking_trial
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